The original question had to be edited down. I think that Danforth's eagerness and ease with which he believed the girls was a situation in which mass hysteria played an important role. Danforth clearly recognized that his own prestige and stature was contingent on the girls' story of accusation and witchcraft being believed and accepted. If he questions their story and makes them suspect, then his own status becomes questioned. Danforth recognizes that mass hysteria is what enabled him to possess power and to be perceived as important. Mass hysteria is what allows this to happen. Failure on this end to acquiesce to mass hysteria in terms of supporting the girls means a loss of credibility. In many respects, people like Danforth and Hathorne are "riding the wave" of public fear and hysteria in order to see their own social positions consolidated. If they are not able to use this to their own advantage, then their own prestige drops. It is for this reason that mass hysteria plays a major role in Danforth's acceptance of the girls' stories and his support of them.